DaveS
Well-Known Member
On another thread I told the tale of (eventually) fixing a starter motor problem. Part of the difficulty was that I simply ran out of time before I could finish tracing the fault, so had to abandon everything for a fortnight while having the starter motor (unnecessarily) overhauled in the interim. On returning yesterday the actual wiring fault was located in a few minutes, and the starter re-installed with the by-now customary fiddling and bad language.
The starter then worked perfectly - great! But the engine wouldn't start. "Must be cold" says I. Cold start procedure and full throttle. At the 3rd or 4th attempt it fired, but with little enthusiasm. "It'll be better once it's heated up" says I. Anyway, a few minutes later, it ran quite well in neutral at up to 2000 revs and was happy to idle, but putting it in forward gear slowed it right down, and putting it in reverse (Kiwi's v. course pitch) would stop it completely. The exhaust seemed a bit blue and there was a light sheen on the water, both indicating some oil in the exhaust.
With the engine stopped I felt round it to see what sort of temperature it had reached - and then noticed the decompression lever up! A fortnight ago I had been inching the flywheel round while checking / cleaning up the starter ring, which was easier to do with the engine decompressed - and I had forgotten about it. With the lever returned to the normal position the engine immediately started and ran correctly with, as far as I could tell at the pontoon, full power. No blue smoke or oil sheen, and a deeper, less "tinny" sound.
So the two questions are: (1) Is this normal behaviour? (The engine, not its owner! /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif) I had always understood that a diesel wouldn't start decompressed, but mine (VP2002) clearly does - after a fashion. (2) Am I likely to have done any damage? The total running time decompressed was perhaps 15 or 20 minutes.
The starter then worked perfectly - great! But the engine wouldn't start. "Must be cold" says I. Cold start procedure and full throttle. At the 3rd or 4th attempt it fired, but with little enthusiasm. "It'll be better once it's heated up" says I. Anyway, a few minutes later, it ran quite well in neutral at up to 2000 revs and was happy to idle, but putting it in forward gear slowed it right down, and putting it in reverse (Kiwi's v. course pitch) would stop it completely. The exhaust seemed a bit blue and there was a light sheen on the water, both indicating some oil in the exhaust.
With the engine stopped I felt round it to see what sort of temperature it had reached - and then noticed the decompression lever up! A fortnight ago I had been inching the flywheel round while checking / cleaning up the starter ring, which was easier to do with the engine decompressed - and I had forgotten about it. With the lever returned to the normal position the engine immediately started and ran correctly with, as far as I could tell at the pontoon, full power. No blue smoke or oil sheen, and a deeper, less "tinny" sound.
So the two questions are: (1) Is this normal behaviour? (The engine, not its owner! /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif) I had always understood that a diesel wouldn't start decompressed, but mine (VP2002) clearly does - after a fashion. (2) Am I likely to have done any damage? The total running time decompressed was perhaps 15 or 20 minutes.